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The Clarion Ledger reports:
The Clarion-Ledger filed a lawsuit Tuesday against the city of Jackson for failing to respond to requests for public records involving crime statistics, the mayorโ€™s security budget and his authorization letter to board an aircraft armed.

The lawsuit contends that the city refused to hand over a range of documents, including the mayorโ€™s expense report for a trip to the Bahamas and papers showing firearms training for the mayor.

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โ€œI want to go before a judge and I want to demonstrate to the judge how The Clarion-Ledger has been inaccurate and inept in their reporting and theyโ€™ve given the public misinformation,โ€ he said earlier Tuesday, adding that the paperโ€™s coverage of crime and other topics has been erroneous.

The mayor could not cite any law that entitled him to deny requests based on his opinion of the source of the request.

Previous Comments

Luckily, the clarionledger isn’t looking for much except to foreclose him from refusing their future requests. I predicted lots of suits once he took office but I’m hopeful he won’t cause any real good ones that place the city at great financial risks. Frank has the same problem many of my clients have. They believe that judges and juries are as gullible and amenable to all kinds of strage bullshit as they are. Again, he’s either a slow learner or has a mighty dim view of how the legal system works. No judge will give a damn about his opinion on the clarion ledger. I believe Brian Johnson was prophetic when he said always go with the smart guy.


I will just sit back and watch these two losers fight it out. There is an old adage that says “there is no honor among thieves”. IMO both of these attention seekers played the game very well until they stole the hearts of the majority of the people. Now they are fighting amongest themselves. I predict that there will be a lot of skeletons fall out of the closet on both sides. The real winner will be the public, who will get a chance to see the good, the bad, and the ugly.


The kicker in these open meetings and open records suits are the attorney’s fees that can be recovered. In the last one won by the CL against the City of Jackson they recovered over $60,000.00 in attorney’s fees.


I think that since Melton “tore” the requests up, than HE should be made to pay any penalities or damages. BTW, the dictionary definition of shread is……. shredยทded, or shred shredยทding, shreds To cut or tear into shreds. The key word is tear.


pneville, That’s why it’s important for the city to follow the law. We are about to post this week’s cover story, which is a long feature on open records. (More informative than anything you’ll ever find in The Clarion-Ledger.) The story is called “The Closed City,” and that is what Jackson has become under this administration. Fortunately, Melton has no real authority over open records laws, because these laws were established at a state level and supercede his authority. At present, the legally required system for releasing information is completely broken, whether through accident or design. If the Melton administration does not get its act together on open records, I am sure this will only be the first of many lawsuits against it.


Yes, I agree that this still looks like we’re watching a lover’s spat between The Clarion-Ledger and Frank Meltonโ€”however, the newspaper is right that its requests should be honored. It stings a bit that they have not covered Melton’s campaign against the JFP in past months, as we will cover him trashing them. But the stories that are about to go up with really bring everyone up to date. I’m glad to see The Clarion-Ledger at the accountability party. Wish they’d joined us a while back, though.


It was hard to argue against the CL’s claim for the $60,000 in attorney’s fees since that is what they had actually already paid its law firm.


Just in from the CL: Jackson Mayor Frank Melton and The Clarion-Ledger today signed an agreement ending the newspaperโ€™s lawsuit against the mayor over unfilled requests for public documents. The agreement requires the mayor to provide documents requested by the paper within 48 hours and to inform all of his department heads in writing that they are to answer all future open records requests within 14 working days, the period set by state law. But the agreement must be ratified by the Jackson City Council to end the suit entirely, lawyers for both sides said. โ€œHe wants to go ahead and put this behind him, so he can move on to other serious matters that need his attention,โ€ said former mayor Dale Danks, who is Meltonโ€™s attorney in the lawsuit. โ€œHe thinks by doing this at this time and getting it behind him, he is going to set the right example for the City Council and the members.โ€ Clarion-Ledger lawyer Leonard Van Slyke said the agreement holds Melton accountable for making sure city departmentโ€™s under his control abide by state law. As part of the agreement, the mayor has agreed to put it on the June 27 council agenda. Van Slyke said if the council does not approve the settlement, the newspaper will move forward with its lawsuit against city and the City Council. So now the mayorโ€™s attorney, who is the cityโ€™s contract attorney, has worked out this settlement for the mayor and the city counsel will have to approve or be responsible for the city being sued, when it was the mayors actions that brought this suit to the city. FM walks away clean and the City is left to comply with his wishes, something is messed up here. Can not the city counsel modify the agreement to include all forms of public information request.


Yep, I know, they called and interviewed me about it. Out of respect for the reporter (not the newspaper), I didn’t break it online, yet.


He’s not just any attorney. He’s also the former Mayor. It’s like a psychedelic version of “Deliverance” at City Hall.


It’s remarkable, really, to see how other journalists (or editors) work. Chris Joyner and I had a good talk about public records yesterdayโ€”and I made it clear to him repeatedly that I had *two* concerns about The Clarion-Ledger’s settlement with Melton: 1. That because it was public-records law, which must apply to everyone, that that be taken into consideration when an agreement was reached with one publication. We talked about the problems with this in some details. 2. That Melton’s private attorney, Danks, should not be in the role of “overseeing” the public-records process in any way. We also talked in some detail about the reason the city has so many public-records requestsโ€”because they do not have good public information folks and that they tell media outlets to file a public-records request over the silliest little thing — then it becomes a big drama for them. This, however, is what shows up in the story: Donna Ladd, editor in chief for the Jackson Free Press, said she is concerned the city still might stonewall other media outlets. “We want it made clear somehow that the city has not reached an agreement (solely) with The Clarion-Ledger. It has to treat all media the same way,” she said. Attorneys for both sides said they believe the settlement will benefit all media outlets and that the public at large by reforming the city’s public records process. “The whole idea is to have a uniform process for all requests,” Danks said. What B.S. Lifted out of context as that quote is, it makes it sound like I don’t understand that this settlement was between the two parties — but that my concern, which I stated clearly for him, is that the city should not be settling a public-records request with one media outlet because, by the very nature of those laws, it could not then be apply unequally. The city should not be setttling the suit with one outlet; it should be following. the. law. The Clarion-Ledger should take this to court, not try to work some deal with Melton’s private attorney who has all sorts of potential conflicts dealing with public records (like the requests about his contract that we have pending). It makes no sense that they’re not. To make this clear, at the end of our conversation, I clarified to Joyner that I had two problems with the settlement and to please report both in context. And the other big problem they have, which Joyner and I talked about specifically, is that the city attorney’s office opposes a settlement. They don’t tell us that part in this puff piece on behalf of The Clarion-Ledger, now do they? Sigh. At least he didn’t try to interview me in e-mail.

MFP Solutions Lab logo

The Mississippi Free Press produced this story through the MFP Solutions Lab, supported by the Solutions Journalism Network. This series digs into Mississippiโ€™s systemic issues and sheds light on responses to them in other communities. Beyond just reporting on problems, these stories interrogate their causes and inspect potential solutions.

Mississippi native Donna Ladd and partner Todd Stauffer founded the Jackson Free Press in 2002 in the capital city. The heavily awarded local newspaper did many investigations heralded across the state and nation and served as a paper of record due to its diversity, inclusion, in-depth reporting and deep connection to readers and dedication to narrative change in and about Mississippi. In 2022, the nonprofit Mississippi Free Press, founded by Ladd and JFP Associate Publisher Kimberly Griffin in 2020, purchased the journalism assets and archives of the Jackson Free Press. A Google grant through AAN Publishers enabled Newspack's integration of the JFP archives into the Mississippi Free Press website to become part of a more searchable archive of recent Mississippi history and essential journalism.